3 MORNING ENTERPRISE, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1913. MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS By Gross HENRY JR. 5AY5 ' "Mo ap t wish to impress (Mexiee. Be oealou&'of vkwsfN To" 's,oeAC-' mS sptf psck. vaas ir " .- . 1 ' 1 ' - Wp NOTCOVTTHV "BROTH'S ' MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON E. E. BRODIE - Editor and Publisher Entered as second-class matter January 9, 1911, at the postoffice at Oregon City, under the Act of March 2, 1879. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION One year, by mail . $3.0') Six months, by mail 1.50 Four months, by mail 1-00 Per week, by carrier .10 The Morning Enterprise carrier boys are instructed to put the papers on the porch or in the mail box. If the carrier does not do this, misses you, or neglects getting the paper to you on time, kindly phone the office. This is the only way we can determine whether or not the carriers are following instructions. Phone Main 2 or B-10. CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER. PRACTICAL THINGS in education are the favorites nowadays in all educational circles. The address of Frank Welles of the office of the state superintendent before the teachers of Clackamas county last week emphasized this feature of the work of the country schools. He declared that the trend of the times is toward the simplification of the courses of study in all of the schools and the abolition of all of those things that are useless to the child in after life. Professor J. E. Calavan, county superintendent, has also that positive idea in the administration of the public school system of the county. He thinks that the schools of the county should be used to train the child for after life not to stuff his head full of things for which he will never have the slight est use. Under the old system of education, the faculties of the schools filled their courses with things and studies that the average child never had the slightest use for in his after life and that merely served to crowd out of his mind some of the other things that might have proved of real benefit to him. There ha? been, in the past, too much of that sort of work. The courses have been too full of useless, trivial things. They have crowded out the real aims and pur poses of education the preparation of the child for after life. The leaders of education have come to the point where they now realize all of this and the past few years have worked a tremendous revolution along this line. Now all of the county superintendents who are keeping apace with the trend of the times are inducing their various boards to cut out all of the useless work and teach those practical courses that give to the child some vital facts that will beneficially prepare him for his after career. The school is the training camp for the young player on the diamond of life. The boy with the mechanical turn of mind should be given those op portunities that will give him the fundamentals of his chosen work. From the schools often come some of the country's greatest inventors or mechan icians. Early in his school life, the trend of the child's mind is shown by the studies in which he excels. He should then be given a specialized course in those elements of that study that will be of benefit to him when he becomes a man and that will prove useful when he goes into the business or profession al world. The problem of making the courses of study practical has grown finer even than this. The county superintendent, for instance, believes, in cutting from those practical courses in the schools all that is useless and trivial and teaching to the students only those parts of the studies that will be of real value later after they have finished their education and the training that they have received in school beings to be used. Mathematics, for an example, is an essential in education. But there are features of the courses in that study for which the child has not the slightest use in later life and that merely take his time and crowd his mind when lie ought to be devoting his energies in other ways. What good does the knowl edge of cube root do a child who may become a lawyer ? What benefit does he gain from one-third of the matter that is nowadays crowded into the text books or that was thrown in there only a few years ago ? The essential thin in mathematics is the knowledge of addition and substraction. From that basis, all of the problems of the average man or woman are worked. A thorough knowledge of that subject is an essential in all courses that are de vised for schools because upon it hinges most of the business dealings in later life. . " 1 . And yet, it is a fact that a large proportion of those students who pass through the educational mill have not a working knowledge of the subject and cannot figure for themselves any of the daily problems with which they are confronted in the ordinary course of business. Of what use, 'then, is all of this other matter that their heads have been crowded with during their school life and that has driven out the very essentials that the school is ex pected to give the child? - - . ' "Reading, 'riting, and 'rithmetic" are still the essentials of education, though some of our text books seem to have forgotten that idea long ago and to have tried to crowd into their pages all of the foreign matter that could possibly be placed there. The same principle applies to English. No man is an educator today in the true sense of the word whose works are filled with words that stretch across half a line of type. Simplicity of words, concentration of thought in the shortest possible space and sentences, is now the keynote of a true educa tion. The man whose habits call for large words is nowadays a freak. The best and most prominent leaders in thought no longer use extensive phrases if they can be avoided and the best writers of all times have won their hold upon literature because of the strength of sentence and simplicity of expres sion. This is the principle of the reform in educational circles all over the coun try and particularly in Clackamas county. It is the keynote to Superintendent Calavan's administration. Practical things in education mean a useful edu cation that trains the boy or girl for later life,:;-; r r it. Good credit opens the door of, fortune. The Bank of Oregon City 3 LBBST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY 1- TRADE 17 1-2 acres of fine beaver dam land, 1 1-2 miles from Mc Minnville, all improved. Price 4000.00; will exchange for equal value in Oregon City property or acreage near this city. This property is free from incumbrance and title guaranteed. DILLMAN & HOWLAND Heart to Heart Talks Much of the Blind ness In the World Can and Should Be Ended Forever By HELEN KELLER, Remarkable Blind and Deaf Mute I WAS blind; now I see. I was deaf; now I hear. I was dumb; now I speak. The hands of others wrought this miracle in me. I am glad to think of what the blind can do, because their brave accomplishments prove, absolutely prove, what people with five senses can do. They show what good servants the brain and the senses can be when they WORK TOGETHER. You who see raise your eyes and behold the sun and moon, the earth, the ocean and the faces of men. We who are blind stretch out our hands and know all the softness of growing things, all the sweet ways of children, all the endearments of human affection. But the senses alone are not enough. It is only when they are united with IMAGINATION AND THOUGHT and feeling that they acquire their full value. THOSE WHO ARE BLIND KNOW HOW TO BE BLIND. THEY MUST ALSO LEARN HOW TO WORK TOGETHER WITH THE SEE ING SO THAT EVERY BLIND CHILD MAY BE TAUGHT, EVERY BLIND MAN AND WOMAN HELPED. WE CAN. WE MUST UNITE SO THAT MUCH OF THE BLINDNESS IN THE WORLD SHALL BE ENDED FOREVER. CATTLE PRICES HOLD STEADY FOR WEEK Receipts for the week at Portland stock yards have been: Cattle 757, calves 18, hogs 4330, sheep 5144, horses 103. Cattle market holdings steady for top quality, with steers selling at $7.50 for best stuff. More medium grade cattle were offered than choice. Cow stuff was about the same grade of poor quality that has been - offered for some time, selling from $4,50 to $5.75 with just one lot selling for 6 cents. Prime light calves are worth $9.00, heavy ones $6.00 to $7.75. Bulls featured from $5.50 to $6.25. Stags steady. A big run of hogs for the first of the week, but tops still held at 8 cents for three loads Monday and the week closed strong with fifteen loads for the open market and top quality still going at 8 cents and this price is apt to hold until stock show season. The show is billed December 8-13 and will attract shippers from the entire northwest and is the largest show ever held west of the Rockies. Sheep receipts were increased from every northwestern state this week, still the sum total was not exception ally large, but what the run lacked in quantity it amply, made up in quality. Prime ewes brought $4.00 again and choice wethers $4.75 to $5.00 for ex ceptional quality and lambs elicited a $6.00 bid with the market closing on a firm basis. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Real estate transfers filed with the county recorder, Monday are as fol lows: W. E. Simpson to Ida E. Simpson, lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 in block 4, Mountain View addition to Oregon City; $1. Julia A. L. Casto to Charles W. Casto and wife, W. 1-2, W. 1-2 S. W. of section 32 township 3 south, range 2 east; $1. Nora Criswell and Charles Criswell to Estella Criswell, 20 acres in W. i sections 3 and 10, township 3south, range 2 east; $1. Nora Criswell and Estella Criswell to Charley Criswell, lot 1, block 148, Oregon City and part of section 10, township 3 south, range 2 east; $1. Charley .Criswell and Estella Cris well to Nora Criswell, parts of sec tions and 10, township 3 south, range 2 east; $1. UNCLAIMED LETTERS 7c; Livestock, Meats BEEF (Live weight) steers cows 6c; bulls 4 to 6c. MUTTON Sheep 3 to 4c; lambs, a to 6Hc. POULTRY (buying) Hens 12c; old roosters 9c; broilers 11c. SAUSAGE 15c lb. PORK 10 to 10c. ' VEAL Calves 12 to 13c dressed, according to grade. DUCKS (Live) 13c; geese, 12c; APPLES 50c and $1. DRIED FRUITS (Buying) Prunes on basis 4 for 35 to 49c. ONIONS $1 pei sack. POTATOES 75 and 85c. BUTTER (Buying) Ordinary country butter 23c to 25c. EGGS Oregon ranch, 45c. Prevailing Oregon City' prices are as follows: HIDES buying Green salted, 10c. OATS (buying) $23.50 and $24.50 wheat 77c and 78c; oil meal selling $38; Shady Brook feed $1.30. CORN Whole corn $36; cracked $37. SHEEP PELTS 75c to $1.50 eacn. FLOUR $4.30 to $5. HAY (buying) Clover, at $8 and $9; timothy $13 and $14; oat hay best $10 and $11; mixed $9 to $12; Idaho and eastern Oregon timothy selling $20; valley timothy $15 to $16. FEED (selling) Shorts $24.50; bran $22.50; feed barley $30 to $31. There is yet time this year for Ciu dad Juraz to be captured three or four times. - The classified acs columns of The Enterprise satisfy your wants. . The following is a list of unclaimed letters at the Oregon City postoffice for the week ending November 28, 1913: Women's list Cox, Miss Wilda; Kremer, Mrs. John; Mitchell, M audit:; Palmer, E. H.; Stroller, Edith, Tag gard; Mrs. Ida; Throves, Grace. Men's list Borlan, Arthur, Camp bell, W. R.; Denlin, R.; Gunther, Hen ry; Jones, Charles;; Lanig, G. W.; Mc Clain, D.; Nadeau, Joseph; Nixon, James; Petty, James (2); Purdy, Claire N.; Powell, Cyrus;; Wikert, Wm. N. CITY STATISTICS LARSEN Born, Sunday, Novem ber 30, to the wife of L. M. H. Larsen, 905 John Adams street, a daughter. You forget that you are an adult and demand an equal intelligence and real ization of right and wrong from those who have neither the reasoning fac ulty nor the experience to see life as plainly as you behold it. "Boarded up." In the hot weather in the city, when the houses cast no refreshing shadows such as lie under the trees and along the fence rows in the country, there are two melancholy sights. One of them is to be seen in the slums. There men and women and little children sweat and pant and live their lives among sights and sounds and odors which defile the air and make it pestilential. The other lies "uptown," where the wealthy folks live when they are in town. Now they are summering by seashore or lakeside or in the cool, breezy mountains. Their houses stand tenant less, with doors and windows boarded up. You may walk along row after row of houses of the wealthy without find ing one open. In the slums the gutters swarm. In the rich districts you may walk squares without seeing any one save an occasional watchman or caretaker. The quarters of the wealthy are al most as deserted as the ruins of Baby lon. At night one might almost hear in fancy the hooting of the owl and the yelping of the jackal that make the silence more pronounced in the wreck that was Nineveh. Too often do the rich board up them selves as well as their houses. Be tween them and their brothers, the poor, is a wall of gold that shuts out human sympathy. They are "boarded up." They hoard their treasures of wealth and art as in summer they close up their mansions. In winter the houses are occupied for a brief time between Sittings to winter resorts. Most of the year the town houses are closed. So it is with their sympathies. They close them up as they do their houses. Every city, every town and villa has its dividing line between its rich dis trict and its poor quarter. Beyond it the poor may not pass and the rich do not care to travel. They board themselves up. Not all, of course. Some there be who keep open all the year round the houses of their love and brotherliness, who do not Inclose themselves within their own four walls and forget the world without. Of such are the true philanthropists, "lovers of man," who work in hot weather and in cold for the advance ment of their fellow men. They are invested with the sense of the brother hood of man, and they garb themselves in the robes of charity and forget the rich raiment to which, in virtue of their worldly wealth, they are en titled. Which, think you, shine the brighter? Helping Oneself. Remember that every man at times stumbles and has to be helped up; if he's down you cannot carry him. The only way in which any man can be helped permanently Is to help himself. Theodore Roosevelt GRANDMOTHER USED SUfiE TEA TO i DARKEN HER FADED OR GRAY HAIR Mixed With Sulphur It Makes Hair Soft, Beau tiful Cures Dandruff The on of Bare and Sulphur for restoring faded, gray hair to Its natural color dates back to grandmother's time. She kept her hair beautifully darkened, (lossy and abundant with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. When ever her hair tell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked ap pearanoe this simple mixture was Applied with wonderful effect. But the Brewing at home Is aanssr and out-of-date. Nowadays killed chemists do this better than ourselves. By asking at any drag store for the ready-to-use produet called "Wyeth's Sac And 8ulphur Hair Remedy" you "will tut a large bottle for about 50 oents. Some druggists make their own, which Is usually too sticky, so Insist upon getting Wyeth's, which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair, and la splendid for dandruff, dry, feverish, itchy scalp and falling hair. A wen-known downtown drug gist says his customers insist on Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, be cause, they say, It darkens bo nat ually and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied it's so easy to use, too. Tou simply dampen a sponge or soft brush and draw It through your hair, taking one strand at a time. Do this at night and by morning the gray keir disappears; after an other application or two, it Is re stored to Us natural color and looks glossy, ot aadabnlnV nvll L-cr onv-o. U. Adv. WE REPAIR ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING MILLER-PARKER COMPANY Next Door to Bonk of Oregon City CUT FLOWERS AND POTTED PLANTS Also all kinds of Fruit Trees, Roses and Shrubbery for sale at the new green houses at Third and Center Streets. Funeral work done at lowest possible prices. Orders received over phone Main 2511. H. J. BIGGER Ponderous. Evelyn He's a very learned man. You wouldn't think so. would you? Natica Oh, yes. I suspected it at once. Evelyn Indeed? Natica Tes. He makes me so tired! London Illustrat ed News. Great Armor. A habit of prayer and a sense of humor forge invincible armor. Beth Bradford Gilchrist Wants, For Sale, Efc MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Work by the day by a woman that will hustle. Call 150S ICth street. WANTED Work of any kind by edu cated man of middle age. Address "S.," care Enterprise. Fm SALE. FOR SALE Five or six acres on car line, four miles from Oregon City; easy cleared and level. Price $200 an acre. Enquire Enterprise office. FOR SALE Two light wagons; good as new. Inquire C. J. Hood, tele phone Main 142. FOR SALE, CHEAP Fine grade jer sey -cows and heifers. Two miles south of Oregon City on the river; phone Main 2013, J. H. VanMeter. FOR SALE Delivery wagon. August Erickson. Phone Main 3051. FOR SALE Two valuable oil paint ings at a great bargain. Must sell this week. Apply H. H. Finik, rcom 9, Barclay Bldg. LOST AND FOUND LOST Gold mesh watch fob, near ' skating rink at West Linn. Finder return to Grace Wilson, Gladstone; reward. LOST Plan gold ladies watch; in itials E. L. G. engraved on watch. Lost on Main street. Reward for return to Enterprise. L. AUSTIN, the tailor, for men and women. Suits made to your meas ure, alterations and refitting. Prices reasonable, Room 9, Barclay building. WOOD AND COAL OREGON CITY WOOD &. FUEL GO. Wood and eoal, 4-foot and lS-inch lengths, delivered to all parts of city; sawing c specialty. Phone yffur orders Pacific 1371, Home A12. F. M. BLUHM NOTICE OF ELECTION Notice is hereby given that an elec tion will be held in the City of West . Linn; in Clackamas county, Oregon, on the 31st day of December, 1913. to determine whether the bound aries of the said city of West Linn shall be altered and extended to in clude the following bounded and de scribed tract, to-wit: Beginning at a railroad tee "rail set at a point on the south boundary line of tract thirty-three (33) in Wil- lamette Tracts, situate in Clack amas county, Oregon, said point Is on the boundary line of the town of West Linn" in Clackamas county, Oregon, and at a point which is N. 22 deg. 21 min. W. 995 feet distant from an iron pipe set at the south east corner of tract sixty-one in said Willamette Tracts; thence wester ly following the boundary line of the town of Willamette in Clack amas county, Oregon, to the south west corner of tract 36 in said Willamette Tracts; thence north along the west boundary line of tracts twentyfour (24) and thirty six (36) to the center of the county road on the west line of tract six teen (16) ; thence northwesterly along the center line of said county road to the north boundary line of said Willamette Tracts; thence easterly following the boundary line of said Willamette Tracts to an in tersection with the boundary line of said West Linn at a point on north westerly side of the county road from Oregon City to Willamette; thence southwesterly along said county road to the place of begin? ning, all in Clackamas county, state of Oregon. And an election will also be held in the territory so proposed to be an nexed, on the same date and for the same purpose. Each of said elections will begin at the hour of 8 o'clock a. m. and , continue until 8 o'clock p. m., of the said day. The polling place within the city of West Linn will be at the city hall therein, at the Willamette Falls Railway station of the Portland, Eu gene & Eastern Railway company at the west end of the suspension bridge, extending across the Wil lamette river between West Linn and Oregon City. The judges will be L. L. Porter, L. L. Pickens and F. Doty; the clerks will be N. C. Michels, Moreita Hickman and Ella Farmer. The polling place within the ter ritory proposed to be annexed will be upon lot B of block 16, Willam ette Tracts, according to the duly . recorded plat thereof of record in the office of the recorder of con veyances of Clackamas county, Oret gon. The judges will be D. W. Farmer, Chas. Fromong and John , Ryser; the clerks will be Geo. De- Bok, W. J. Bartholemew and A. Robinson. That at said election the electors will be invited to vote upon - sucn proposition by placing upon their ballots the words "for annexation" or "against annexation." By order of the common council of the city of West Linn. Dated, December 2, 1913. L. L. PORTER, Recorder. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the County Court of the state of Oregon, for Clackamas county. In the matter of the Estate of Shelby B. Shaver, Deceased. Notice is hereby given to the credit ' ors of, and all persons interested in, said estate, that the undersigned has been appointed by the above en titled court, administrator of the es tate of Shelby B. Shaver, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby required to present the same, properly verified to the undersigned at Oregon City, Oregon, within six months from the time of first publication of this no tice. GEORGE M. SHAVER, Administrator of the Estate of' Shelby B. Shaver, Deceased. CLARENCE L. EATON, Attorney for Administrator. 203-4 Masonic Temple, Oregon City, Oregon. First publication, November 25, 1913. NOTICE In the matter of the estate of John C. Jaeger, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has filed his final ac count as administrator de bonis non in the above named estate, and the above named court has set the 12& day of December, 1913, at the hor of 1:00 p. m. of said day at the court house of said county as the time - and place for hearing any and all objections to the allowance and ap proval of said final account, and any person desiring to file objections thereto is required to file the same with the said court prior to said date. , GUSTAV JAEGER, Administrator de bonis hon of the estate of John C. Jaeger, Deceased. L. G. ICE. DENTIST Beaver Bui'ding Phones: Main 1221 or A-193 - Pabst's Okay Specific Does the worx. You all J r (( know It by reputation. S.UU Price Y FOR SALE BY JONES DRUG COMPANY D. C. LATOTJRETTE, President F. J. METER, Cashier. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON CAPITAL $50,000 00 .) Traneeote s Snrel Banking Business. Open frem A. M. te P. fct